• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
UT Shield
The University of Texas at Austin

June 24, 2022, Filed Under: ESL, Social, UT, Weekend Attractions

Bullock Museum

Upcoming Social Events:

Talk Time

  • Practice your English conversation skills with native English speakers!
  • Tuesday, June 28
  • 4:30 – 5:30 pm
  • In Person: PAR 101

 

Bowling & Billiards Social

  • Join your friends and classmates in the ELC for fun playing bowling and billiards (or pool in the US).
  • Bring your UT ID and socks if you want to bowl.
  • Friday, July 1
  • 3:30 – 4:30 pm
  • In Person: Texas Union Underground, UNB 1.120 

Bullock Texas State History Museum

Bullock Texas State History Museum

  • Open Wednesday – Sunday
  • 10:00 am – 5:00 pm
  • Closed Monday and Tuesday
  • They are limiting crowd capacity with timed ticketing.
  • To purchase tickets online for $11, please visit Admission and Tickets.
  • You will receive a confirmation that you can print and bring to the Museum, or they can scan your ticket from your phone.
  • Wear a mask, wash or sanitize your hands, stay 6 feet apart from other people.

The Bullock Museum tells the story of Texas. When you enter the museum, you’ll interact with the earliest parts of Texas history, which pre-dates European contact in the Americas. As you move up the stairs, you’ll be moving forward in Texas history until you reach modern-day.

With the earliest object dating more than 16,000 years ago, Becoming Texas begins with the first people to step on the land, early American Indians, and the tools and materials they used to hunt, gather, and build.

First Floor:

“Becoming Texas is an immersive environment that uncovers Texas history with the most contemporary research on our past. This one-of-a-kind journey through more than 16,000 years of Texas history documents the rise and fall of nations up to Mexican Independence in 1821.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

“Sam Houston, sculpted by Elisabet Ney in 1892.”

Second Floor:

“This gallery explores Texas history from 1821 to 1936. Discover the personal stories and the people, places, and events that shaped the state as Texas moved through revolution, annexation, immigration, the economics and human cost of slavery, the Civil War, Reconstruction, and the Depression-era extravagance that highlighted the state’s 100th birthday.”

 

 

 

“A sprawling factory quickly built for WWII aircraft training in Dallas produced the AT-6 airplane, known as the “Texan” — a plane so durable that many later saw service in the Korean War.”

Third Floor:

“From ranching artifacts with Tejano roots to oil field drill bits to Civil Rights-era documents to music with unique Texas sensibilities, the third floor gallery captures the excitement of Texas’s emergence onto the national stage in the 20th century. Explore Texas cattle stories, the emergency of the oil and gas industy, Texans’ presence in the military, the importance of the culture of music and sports, and Texas’s leading role in STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math).”

 

 

 

Mental Health mind matters exhibition at the Bullock Texas State history museum.
“Mental illness touches all of our lives in some way. In 2014, the National Institute of Mental Health reported that there were an estimated 43.6 million adults in the U.S. with a mental illness – 18.1% of all adults in the United States. Mental illness can happen to anyone, it is treatable, and it is important for us as a society to talk about it.”

Special Exhibition:

Mental Health: Mind Matters

“In this tri-lingual English, Spanish, and French exhibition, you can explore how mental illness has been treated in the past, put yourselves in the shoes of people living with mental illness, and use full-body activities to learn about healthy recognition and expression of emotions.

  • On view until July 31.
  • Engage with interactive components that examine the history of treatments, common misperceptions of mental illnesses and mental health, and how attitudes toward mental illnesses have varied over time.
  • Explore empathy-building experiences that demonstrate what some people who live with mental illnesses may experience.
  • Discover how artistic activities like painting, dancing, and writing can help us identify and express our emotions, and strengthen our mental health.”

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Kate says

    July 27, 2022 at 7:31 pm

    The Bullock Museum,its interesting place, thank for idea to visit.

    Reply

Leave a Reply to Kate Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Primary Sidebar

Subscribe

Join our mailing list for the latest updates!

Loading

Follow Us on Instagram

 

View this profile on Instagram

 

Texas Global English Language Center (@texasglobalelc) • Instagram photos and videos

UT Home | Emergency Information | Site Policies | Web Accessibility | Web Privacy | Adobe Reader

© The University of Texas at Austin 2025